Swiss assistant coach Michel Pont, who celebrates his 60th birthday on Thursday, said 1998 World Cup-winners France have the upper hand.

Pont says France coach Didier Deschamps has united his squad after the debacle of their South Africa 2010 campaign, when the team went on strike in support of Nicolas Anelka after a row with then-coach Raymond Domenech.

"Us, favourites? Absolutely not," said Pont, who has worked under current coach Ottmar Hitzfeld since 2008, as well as his predecessor Jakub Kuhn from 2001-2008.

"Frankly, the current French team impresses me, they have found harmony. France has always had technical quality, they have simply returned to their normal level, which they never should have left.

"It's extremely difficult to find their weak points, it is the first time I have experienced this in 13 years.

"We have to create their weak points, by improvising and taking each chance. We can't sit back and put 10 players behind the ball, we have to find ways against them."

Swiss defender Johan Djourou, who will mark France's Real Madrid striker Karim Benezema, a two-goal scorer against Honduras, said his side have nothing to fear.

"France are favourites, by the fame of their players, who play in the biggest clubs," said the 27-year-old ex-Arsenal defender, who is now at Hamburg.

"But on the day, this is the game that counts, not the name of the player or his club."

Deschamps has plenty of options up front with Arsenal's Olivier Giroud, who spent most of the Honduras game on the bench as 22-year-old Antoine Griezmann shone, eager to start.

Midfielder Yohan Cabaye will not feature after he came off in the Honduras match with a hamstring injury.

The Swiss went through their paces on Wednesday morning in Porto Seguro with Seferovic insisting they have to make a strong start at Salvador's Arena Fonte Nova.

"If we play on the same level as against Ecuador, it will not work," the 22-year-old insisted.

France only squeezed into the World Cup finals by narrowly defeating Ukraine in a play-off.

Now that they are here, ex-captain Patrice Evra insists they are not the faction-riddled outfit from 2010, but rather a untied and cohesive unit.

"We play for the same country and since the play-off in November there has been real pride in wearing the shirt," said the Manchester United star.